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I-29 north of Fargo remains closed due to floodwaters

The North Dakota Department of Transportation expects Interstate 29 north of Fargo to remain closed for a couple more days. The interstate was closed on Sunday when several inches of floodwater flowed across all four lanes.

DOT Engineer Kevin Gorder said the water is going down, but damage to the roadway needs to be repaired. Gorder said the biggest concern is erosion.

"We have pictures in our office of pipes that have been washed out and all you see is this bridge of pavement that's not designed for it," Gorder said. "You put traffic on that and it's a recipe for disaster, so we have to be very careful and cautious.

Gorder said they want to get the traffic back on the road that was designed to carry that load, but that the number one priority is to do it safely.

The Interstate traffic is currently detoured onto state highways. Those roads are sustaining some serious damage because of all the heavy truck traffic.

OFFICIALS SAY WATER, INTENSITY DROPPING

Officials monitoring flooding on the Red
River system in the Fargo area say the intensity level is down but
many roads in the county and a large stretch of Interstate 29
remain closed.

The river level in Fargo on Wednesday morning was 37.4 feet,
down from Saturday's crest of 38.75. Officials say the water is
slowly dropping north of the city, where unprecedented overland
flooding has left many rural residents isolated.

The National Guard is being called off levee patrol in Fargo.

Fargo officials say that five homes sustained damage from the
flood, most from pump failures.

Officials from Fargo and Cass County have offered assistance for
Valley City, about 50 miles east of Fargo, where the Sheyenne River
is expected to crest about 2 feet higher than originally forecast.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

Gallery

Residents near Perley, Minn. drive through several inches of running water on Tuesday, April 12, 2011, to get out of their farm. Many residents here expect to be dealing with closed roads for a week or two until floodwater recedes.MPR Photo/Dan GundersonView full galleryThis road near Kragnes, Minn. is one of perhaps hundreds of spots that will need to be repaired as floodwaters recede in the Red River Valley. Local officials are hoping Minnesota will receive a federal disaster declaration so FEMA will help pay for repairs.MPR Photo/Dan GundersonSnowplows are used to clear floodwater from Interstate 29 April 11, 2011 near Argusville, North Dakota. Although the Red River crested in nearby Fargo on Saturday at 38.75 feet, the fourth-highest flood on record, areas north of the city are still experiencing near-record flooding.Scott Olson/Getty ImagesFloodwaters are making travel difficult in much of the Red River Valley as dozens of roads are under water, including a portion of Interstate 29 north of Fargo. Here, a lone cars heads south on I-29 on Monday, April 11, 2011. A stretch of interstate just north of this point is closed and will be for some time.MPR Photo/Ann Arbor Miller